Pokémon Go players have flocked to the museum in Washington, D.C. honoring Jews killed by the Nazis in World War II, irking administrators, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.

"Playing the game is not appropriate in the museum, which is a memorial to the victims of Nazism," a spokesman for the museum, Andrew Hollinger, said. "We are trying to find out if we can get the museum excluded from the game."

You would think they'd be happy to have more people coming through the door. If it weren't for bus loads of school kids being forced to go as part of their mandatory holocaust education (read: indoctrination) those museums would be a total ghost town.

WTH is this Pokemon Go? They were talking about it the other day on a local radio show.

Quote:

Pokémon Go, its biggest entry into the mobile space, now available for a free download on Android and iOS. It’s so popular that it’s on the verge of overtaking Twitter in terms of daily active users on Android. In simple terms, Pokémon Go uses your phone’s GPS and clock to detect where and when you are in the game and make Pokémon "appear" around you (on your phone screen) so you can go and catch them. As you move around, different and more types of Pokémon will appear depending on where you are and what time it is. The idea is to encourage you to travel around the real world to catch Pokémon in the game. (This combination of a game and the real world interacting is known as "augmented reality." More on that later.)